Title:
Fred Toyosaburo Korematsu papers, 1934-1987
Korematsu
Abstract:
Coram nobis papers relating to Fred Korematsu's legal case (writ of coram nobis: n. from Latin for "in our presence", an order
by a court of appeals to a court which rendered judgment requiring that trial court to consider facts not on the trial record
which might have resulted in a different judgment if known at the time of trial.)
Date:
1934 (issued)
Contents:
Series I: Government Documents and Correspondence, 1934-1947, Boxes 3895-3896 ; Series II: Court Documents, 1941-1944, Boxes
3896-3897; Series III: Newspaper clippings and articles, 1942-1945, Box 3897; Series IV: Postwar Supplemental Materials, 1949-1981,
Box 3897; Boxes 3897-3898; Series V: Court Documents, 1982-1988, Boxes 3897-3898;Series VI: Korematsu, Yasui and Hirabayashi
Legal Teams, Box 3899
Subject:
n-us-ca
Korematsu, Fred -- 1919-2005
Japanese Americans -- California -- Evacuation and relocation, 1942-1945
Legal documents -- United States
Note:
Fred Toyobasuro Korematsu was born in Oakland on January 30,1919, attended local schools, and worked in his family's nearby
flower nursery. Defying the 1942 Japanese-American relocation order, he went into hiding and was subsequently arrested after
being recognized. Korematsu agreed to let his case act as a test to determine the legality of the Japanese-American internment,
which went all the way to the Supreme Court before being decided in the government's favor. In 1983, his conviction was overturned
on the basis of suppressed evidence, and he spent the rest of his life fighting against the suppression of American civil
liberties based on race. Korematsu died on Marin County on March 30, 2005.
Korematsu.
Gift; Diane Matsuda, California Civilties Public Education Program; 2005.
Inventory available in library; item level control.
Unrestricted. Please credit California State Library.
Physical Description:
print
5 archival boxes; 16 x 12 1/2 x 10 1/4 in.
Language:
English
Identifier:
Origin:
California
Copyright Note:
Unrestricted. Please credit California State Library.